Transcript

3.
National Trends• K–12 distance education continues to grow• Correspondence education continues to be prevalent• Blended learning is seen as effective ICT• Several jurisdictions have made dramatic changes over the past five years

4.
National Trends: Regulation• Many provinces and territories have some reference to distance education in the Education Act or Schools Act – this is changing!• regulation of K–12 distance education is the use of contracts with MoE or policy handbooks• British Columbia and Nova Scotia are major exceptions

7.
National Trends: Activity• Growth of K-12 distance education is quite uneven – reported growth in some jurisdictions may be due to better accounting• Participation in blended learning is not counted in most instances

9.
Newfoundland and Labrador• Single province-wide online program since 2001 – grew out of district-based initiatives and legacy distance education program• No specific policies for online learning, but provincial program is housed within MOE

10.
Nova Scotia• Recent creation of a single province-wide program – grew out of district-based online initiatives• 11 provisions included in the agreement between the Government & teachers union

11.
Prince Edward Island• Uses online learning program in New Brunswick – legacy video conferencing program has been phased out• MOE has issued two directives since 2001 containing guidelines for the use of distance education in K-12 environment

12.
New Brunswick• Single province-wide program since 1998 – used frequently by face-to-face teachers too• Ministry has created a 100+ page handbook that districts have to agree to in order to participate in online learning• Provincial program is housed within MOE

13.
Quebec• Couple individual online and correspondence programs that partner with school districts – additional a couple of programs that provide for connected classrooms or blended learning• MOE devolved distance education to the districts about a decade ago – currently no regulation

14.
Ontario• Primarily district-based program using the provincial CMS and course content – cooperation between boards through consortiums – three private schools and Independent Learning Centre• Ministry has created contracts that districts have to agree to in order to participate in online learning based on the Provincial E- Learning Strategy

15.
Manitoba• Province offers three forms – MOE manages correspondence and audio teleconference systems – districts manage their own web-based program using MOE content• MOE approves programs and regulates the use of their distance content

16.
Saskatchewan• Primarily district-based programs – most have their own capacity in some form – sixteen districts provided space to external students through the Saskatchewan Distance Learning Course Repository• Province devolved responsibility to districts – no regulation

21.
Nunavut• Utilizes program from Alberta & British Columbia – a belief that southern distance education courses rarely meet the needs of students in context, cultural, relevance, and pedagogy – trying to build internal capacity (e.g., building on other existing programs, including adult programs like “Together @ a Distance”)• Primarily regulated by Ministry or through inter- provincial agreements

22.
Take-Aways• Regulatory behaviour varies considerably from no to extensive regulations• Level of activity is increasing nationally, but to what level we just can’t tell definitively• Unions remain cautiously supportive